Energy & Environment

God-willing, and the creeks don’t rise

Aaron Bady

In the holler when I grew up, a big rainfall was a glorious thing. In this picture my mom just took and sent me, there’s a bridge missing where the rising water washed it away; a yearly spring ritual of my childhood was tramping downstream to find the old bridge and, if it was still intact, carrying it back to where it had originally been placed. Sometimes my dad and I would build dams out of sand and silt, with cinder-block spillways to let the water through. And I still remember with the glee of the child I was then the  year when this entire basin was, briefly, filled with at least a few inches of rushing water. After playing in it for hours, my legs got unbearably itchy from god knows what.

flood“Holler” is Appalachian for “where appalachians live,” the narrow and steep rolling valleys that made large-scale farming impractical, and which continue to make illegal products like moonshine and marijuana the most viable commercial forms of indigenous agriculture. In the deepest hollers, the sun rises at nine and sets at three. And since the only place to put a house is in the narrow floodplains at the bottom, you can never be lost. You just follow the creek until you’re home.

Being transplanted Appalachians — I was born in Wisconsin and we moved to West Virginia, then just across the river in Ohio, when I was six — my family’s house is placed a hundred feet or so above the holler bottom, where a bulldozer somehow scraped a narrow shelf away from the hillside. Occasionally, streams of water would come down off the hillside and wash away stuff in our front and back yards, but that was all. We never had this sort of thing happen to us:

That was from 2009, the worst flooding in a generation. But this weekend there was the usual spring flooding, and as has become more and more common, people whose houses are located close to the creek beds watched waves of water stream through their yards, basements, cars:

Randy Toney was on his way to work when his brother called him about rising flood waters. ”It came in here so quick that it raised four to five feet in several minutes,” says Toney. He’s lived in the area for 24 years and has never seen anything like what happened Saturday night. “I’ve never seen the creek like this before. I’ve seen the creek get up but nothing like this,” says Toney. Floodwaters also destroyed bridges and damaged several roads that could take several months to repair. “We probably have total somewhere in the 20s and some we have not even got to see the damage,” says Bill Topping of the West Virginia Division of Highways.

Meanwhile, the wall of muddy water damaged the Toney’s freezer, well house and several items, but Randy is taking things in stride. ”Material things in life don’t mean anything. They can be replaced,” says Toney.

Just one of those things, right? Flooding has been getting worse and worse in the last decade or so, and as more and more of the dense network of Southern Appalachia’s creeks and streams — that once absorbed excess rainflow — have been transformed into post- mountaintop removal hellscapes, people whose campaign coffers aren’t filled with coal and industry donations have started to question whether there’s a relationship between increasingly regular and destructive flooding and the kind of environmental devastation necessitated by MTR mining:

[Former head of federal mine inspector training, Jack] Spadaro says if you fly over the affected areas, you can clearly see the connection between the flooding and the mountaintop removal. “If you look at any of the areas where the flood is, you can find direct links, such as erosion gullies on the faces of the valley fills, and landslides and debris flows that go all the way down into the valleys below.”

The coalfield counties of West Virginia have been hit by flooding numerous times in the last ten years. May’s floods damaged or destroyed an estimated 3,000 buildings in eleven counties and required the allocation of more than 60 million dollars in government assistance. Governor Joe Manchin, Congressman Nick Rahall and industry spokesmen have all described the flooding as an act of God.

Strangely, God seems to will that the creeks rise a bit more often in areas where this sort of thing:

West Virginia sunset

has been turned into this:

W Va. hilltop without trees

It is hard to overstate how destructive and enormous this practice is, how radically you alter the landscape when you dynamite and blast a hill into rubble and then dump it into the neighboring streambed. This is what it looks like while it’s going on:

mountaintop removal mining operation

Since the Clean Water Act regulated the extent to which it was legal to pollute streams and rivers, the law had to be changed to make it legal to destroy them forever by burying them with entire mountains — in gravel form — but the government agencies in charge of that sort of thing were happy to make the change. Here’s a Washington Post graphic from the a few years ago that gives you a sense of what MTR is, and how it was made legal:

Excerpted from Aaron Bady’s blog, zunguzungu, where you can continue reading his post.

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Comments to "God-willing, and the creeks don’t rise":
    • Roger

      When I was a kid we had a wooden bridge near my home in the puyallup valley in Washington state that would float down stream similar to the bridge in your story the farmers would drag it back with tractors and put it back in place. Some years it happened and other years it didn’t but now its happening more and more.The flooding is getting more intense even so that can’t compare to the damage caused by the type of mining you are talking about. Clear cutting here in the northwest causes alot of damage to streams with excess silt and debris but that a whole different issue.

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    • Jack

      Corporate spokesmen or politician always like to cite a “natural” disaster. Its the hand of god, they say. Or, arsonists if you are in Texas. No one is going to admit to externalities. Climate change is the biggest.

      By the way, the change in climate may be feeding additonal moisture to your area along with the changes in drainage patterns which you cite in your piece. Here in southwestern PA is been raining, and raining, and raining.

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    • Lisa M.

      Thanks for posting this. It is not just W.Virginia – other states bordering Appalachia have similar problems – when I lived in PA strip mining managed to ruin not just topography, but also the aquifers – leaving people without water, or water no longer potable –

      Have you seen the devastation that hydrofracking is creating (related to natural gas production)? A recent NYT article mentioned residents of Pittsburgh PA being advised by local officials to drink bottled water…

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    • Katheryne Hoffman

      Thank you Aaron for helping to raise awareness of our plight here
      in WV. Your Mom and OVEC have been invaluable to us recently
      in helping us to preserve the Gauley Mountain area. The real issue
      here is the water: streams being buried and polluted, never to
      be restored. Thanks again for your insightful comments. Katheryne
      Hoffman, President, Ansted Historic Preservation Council, Inc.

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